Google has something called Perceiver AR but I don't know much about it. It's hard to find any information about it honestly other than the github and I have no idea how to get it installed on a windows machine.
I have seen some really neat commercial applications but have no idea if they actually work or not. Here we have a video of TwoSetViolin listening to some amazing classical songs made by A.I. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=R69JYEfCSeI What A.I. generated this? I have no idea.
Music isn't complicated, it's all the same, that's why everything can be written on music sheet and played the same anywhere by anyone who can read and play. Pop songs all sound like pop songs, country songs all sound like country. They all use the same beats, instruments and so on to make the songs. In a sense I can imagine music composition to be far, far easier than drawings but at the same time the complexities of machine learning could make it harder.
I don't know exactly why music generation is lagging behind but perhaps it's like a language and chatGPT-3's model is something like 800gb+ in size and it's not quite there yet. Maybe music generation is hard like generating fingers in an image lol
Eriane t1_j19q775 wrote
Reply to [D] Why are there no good generative music AIs? by happyhammy
Google has something called Perceiver AR but I don't know much about it. It's hard to find any information about it honestly other than the github and I have no idea how to get it installed on a windows machine.
I have seen some really neat commercial applications but have no idea if they actually work or not. Here we have a video of TwoSetViolin listening to some amazing classical songs made by A.I. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=R69JYEfCSeI What A.I. generated this? I have no idea.
Andrew Southworth talks about various apps you can use to help with music and voices https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=A656GMQt5d0
Music isn't complicated, it's all the same, that's why everything can be written on music sheet and played the same anywhere by anyone who can read and play. Pop songs all sound like pop songs, country songs all sound like country. They all use the same beats, instruments and so on to make the songs. In a sense I can imagine music composition to be far, far easier than drawings but at the same time the complexities of machine learning could make it harder.
I don't know exactly why music generation is lagging behind but perhaps it's like a language and chatGPT-3's model is something like 800gb+ in size and it's not quite there yet. Maybe music generation is hard like generating fingers in an image lol